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Django 3 By Example

You're reading from   Django 3 By Example Build powerful and reliable Python web applications from scratch

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838981952
Length 568 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Antonio Melé Antonio Melé
Author Profile Icon Antonio Melé
Antonio Melé
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Blog Application 2. Enhancing Your Blog with Advanced Features FREE CHAPTER 3. Extending Your Blog Application 4. Building a Social Website 5. Sharing Content on Your Website 6. Tracking User Actions 7. Building an Online Shop 8. Managing Payments and Orders 9. Extending Your Shop 10. Building an E-Learning Platform 11. Rendering and Caching Content 12. Building an API 13. Building a Chat Server 14. Going Live 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Creating templates for your views

You have created views and URL patterns for the blog application. URL patterns map URLs to views, and views decide which data gets returned to the user. Templates define how the data is displayed; they are usually written in HTML in combination with the Django template language. You can find more information about the Django template language at https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.0/ref/templates/language/.

Let's add templates to your application to display posts in a user-friendly manner.

Create the following directories and files inside your blog application directory:

templates/
    blog/
        base.html
        post/
            list.html
            detail.html

The preceding structure will be the file structure for your templates. The base.html file will include the main HTML structure of the website and divide the content into the main content area and a sidebar. The list.html and detail.html files will inherit from the base.html file to render the blog post list and detail views, respectively.

Django has a powerful template language that allows you to specify how data is displayed. It is based on template tags, template variables, and template filters:

  • Template tags control the rendering of the template and look like {% tag %}
  • Template variables get replaced with values when the template is rendered and look like {{ variable }}
  • Template filters allow you to modify variables for display and look like {{ variable|filter }}.

You can see all built-in template tags and filters at https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.0/ref/templates/builtins/.

Edit the base.html file and add the following code:

{% load static %}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
  <title>{% block title %}{% endblock %}</title>
  <link href="{% static "css/blog.css" %}" rel="stylesheet">
</head>
<body>
  <div id="content">
    {% block content %}
    {% endblock %}
  </div>
  <div id="sidebar">
    <h2>My blog</h2>
    <p>This is my blog.</p>
  </div>
</body>
</html>

{% load static %} tells Django to load the static template tags that are provided by the django.contrib.staticfiles application, which is contained in the INSTALLED_APPS setting. After loading them, you are able to use the {% static %} template tag throughout this template. With this template tag, you can include the static files, such as the blog.css file, which you will find in the code of this example under the static/ directory of the blog application. Copy the static/ directory from the code that comes along with this chapter into the same location as your project to apply the CSS styles to the templates. You can find the directory's contents at https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Django-3-by-Example/tree/master/Chapter01/mysite/blog/static.

You can see that there are two {% block %} tags. These tell Django that you want to define a block in that area. Templates that inherit from this template can fill in the blocks with content. You have defined a block called title and a block called content.

Let's edit the post/list.html file and make it look like the following:

{% extends "blog/base.html" %}
{% block title %}My Blog{% endblock %}
{% block content %}
  <h1>My Blog</h1>
  {% for post in posts %}
    <h2>
      <a href="{{ post.get_absolute_url }}">
        {{ post.title }}
      </a>
    </h2>
    <p class="date">
      Published {{ post.publish }} by {{ post.author }}
    </p>
    {{ post.body|truncatewords:30|linebreaks }}
  {% endfor %}
{% endblock %}

With the {% extends %} template tag, you tell Django to inherit from the blog/base.html template. Then, you fill the title and content blocks of the base template with content. You iterate through the posts and display their title, date, author, and body, including a link in the title to the canonical URL of the post.

In the body of the post, you apply two template filters: truncatewords truncates the value to the number of words specified, and linebreaks converts the output into HTML line breaks. You can concatenate as many template filters as you wish; each one will be applied to the output generated by the preceding one.

Open the shell and execute the python manage.py runserver command to start the development server. Open http://127.0.0.1:8000/blog/ in your browser; you will see everything running. Note that you need to have some posts with the Published status to show them here. You should see something like this:

Figure 1.10: The page for the post list view

Next, edit the post/detail.html file:

{% extends "blog/base.html" %}
{% block title %}{{ post.title }}{% endblock %}
{% block content %}
  <h1>{{ post.title }}</h1>
  <p class="date">
    Published {{ post.publish }} by {{ post.author }}
  </p>
  {{ post.body|linebreaks }}
{% endblock %}

Next, you can return to your browser and click on one of the post titles to take a look at the detail view of the post. You should see something like this:

Figure 1.11: The page for the post's detail view

Take a look at the URL—it should be /blog/2020/1/1/who-was-django-reinhardt/. You have designed SEO-friendly URLs for your blog posts.

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